this post was submitted on 06 May 2024
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Sydney Trains
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I wonder if it's to make things easier for people where English is not their first language.
@wscholermann @Tau
Almost certainly.
That's likely at least part of the reasoning behind this change. However the majority of people learning English will simply have a lack of vocabulary rather than a lack of reasoning capacity, so should therefore be able to figure out the words mean from context and observation (or look up the meanings considering smartphones are basically ubiquitous these days).
Hmm not necessarily. Let me put it this way. If you went to Thailand as say a tourist and they say get off instead of alight in Thai would you have a hope in hell of understanding? Would you even pick up the words to pump it into a smartphone ? Context might be helpful but in a foreign city that can quickly go out the door, pardon the pun.
You're right that I wouldn't recognise an unknown word/phrase, but since train announcements are operating in a limited context and I'd be seeing people respond by getting off the train at multiple stops you'd hope I'd figure it out before too long.
This is of course assuming I know some of the language and can recognise basic words such as their equivalent of passengers, going in completely blind would be a real mission (just as it would be coming here with absolutely no English).